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Stronger Than Grief,Grief Support ,Dealing With Grief,Grief Recovery Book,Grief Recovery Process,Grief Recovery Coaching,Grief Empowerment Coaching,Grief Recovery Program,Grief Management Workshop,Grief Management Course

14 Reasons You're Not Letting Yourself Heal:
Which Of These Are Keeping You Miserable And Stuck?
by Coach D Anthony
(Grief Recovery & Empowerment Coach)

14 Reasons - Reviews

Heartfelt Survivor Feedback On The Book
(from Early Reviewers/Clients)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Early Review: Brenda, Grieving Mother from Arizona


If you want to learn to work through your grief this is the book for you. It is written in a way that explains different thoughts that are encountered when dealing with grief. I was so amazed at how much better I felt and truly understood a particular part of my grief immediately.

Whether your loss is a parent, sibling, close relative or even a child, this book will help you understand and work through your grief. Coach D Anthony explains things in such a manner that you will start to feel more alive and want to read even more. The exercises after each chapter will help you process and apply what you have read. All you need is the willingness to want to honor your loved one and learn how to live life after a devastating loss. I have read many articles and joined many groups to work through my devastating loss of my son and not one of them have ever come close to helping me heal like, 14 Reasons You're Not Letting Yourself Heal. Don't waste any more precious time with your loved ones that are still here with you. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain by reading this. Whether your grief is months, years, or even decades old, this book will walk you through the healing process of learning to live life after a devastating loss.

 

Being a client of Coach D Anthony’s previous to reading this book, my expectations were more than exceeded! I discovered more techniques of dealing with the devastating loss of my 22-year old son. Even more amazing, I dealt with a minimum of 3 “unconscious thoughts” that I didn’t realize I was still carrying around in reference to my grief!! If you are sick and tired of being sick and tired, this is THE BOOK that will guide you in moving forward and live again after a devastating loss. Your loved one would not want you to stay in the debilitating grasp that you are in because of their passing. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain!

Early Review: Janet, Grieving Wife from Wyoming


Love this manuscript. The most meaningful messages to me, at this time. are from the section Type of Loss Is Value of Loss. Really hit me… Every loss is grief, no matter the relationship to the deceased. Spouse, child, grandchild, brother, sister, friend. Grief is grief. No one’s grief is greater than another, a fact that needs to be shared and understood!! Family and Friends Are Equipped to Help Me spoke of another ingrained belief which, once dispelled, freed me to find the path to healing and happiness I am enjoying today. And a Final Word or Two is an excellent wrap-up to a very good read. It was a fight every step of the way to lose the darkness, loneliness, misery and pain. Thankful to you Coach for showing me the tools to fight. I am living my life in the light now, happy, hopeful, and grateful. I would recommend this book to friends and family in an instant.  Dispel the myths and let the light back into your life!

Can't wait for this book to be published.  Already have a list of friends/family that I will be sharing it with!!

 

Knowing that Rick always has and will always be with me is perhaps the greatest gift of all. The love has been and will always be with me. My internal messaging to myself was/is the most damaging force allowing the grief, darkness and hopelessness to devour my life. Changing my thoughts changed my life. This is something I strive to accomplish every day. I live to make him proud.  

Early Review: Gail, Grieving Daughter and Sibling from New Mexico


This book is very thought-provoking. After reading it you have a whole new view of the issues of grief. It gives you the feeling of empowerment, of knowing how to grieve and the proper things to do to work through the grief issues. By teaching Survivors the most-often mistaken beliefs of grief issues, it points them in a whole new direction... The examples given in the book are very clear, to the point and very helpful.  The book is a fantastic teaching tool. It is a must-read for everyone who is going through grief.  It will give many grievers hope.

 

Recovery Means Leaving My Loved One Behind not only brings comfort that this is an understandable way to feel, it also brings into focus how by healing you can actually carry them with you. One of the biggest reasons of holding back on the healing is the feeling that if you move forward the connection you had with your loved one will be broken, and they will be forgotten. Having that confirmation that you can always have them with you is of great comfort.

 

I Should Be Doing Better by Now is of great help for two reasons. One, that it is okay to be where you are at in your recovery and two, it is normal to feel that you should be making more progress in your recovery since we are wired to feel that things should be linear. Knowing that no matter where we are at in our recovery; that it is completely normal.

 

No One Talking Means No One Cares helps to bring understanding how others view our loss. It helps to make you realize that others are not going to feel your loss the same way you do and there are certain things you can't expect from others.

 

Family and Friends Are Equipped to Help Me brings great understanding that even though you have family and friends who care about you, that them not helping you doesn't mean that they don't care anymore - but that they really are not sure how to help.  It is natural to feel that since they are not helping us, then that must mean they don't care anymore.  Understanding the real reason why they are not helping will help get rid of so much judgement on our part.

 

In some cases of the passing of a loved one, guilt is automatic in thinking you should have, or could have done something to save them. But, I Deserve This Guilt, It’s My Fault brings understanding how having that guilt is wrong and how holding on to it only hinders you and that your loved one would never want you to carry that guilt.

Early Review: Amy, Grieving Mom, from Connecticut


What struck me most about this book is its constant message of positivity and empowerment: In every chapter, the author brings home his message that grief does NOT have to be a life-sentence and that we can absolutely change our thinking and what he refers to as “ingrained beliefs” to not only survive debilitating grief, but live, and live well after the loss of a loved one. We can take our lives and our futures back into our own hands and reclaim our happiness, using D Anthony’s methods which he has used with many clients successfully. Many of the “myths” I have held myself… for example, the mistaken belief that the depth of one’s misery and suffering is “in direct proportion to the depth/quality of our love”. I loved his reference to the “Badge of Honor” that some of us take on upon the loss of a loved one, thinking there is something noble about pain and misery, not realizing that we are condemning ourselves to suffering when there is no need.

 

While I enjoyed all the chapters and found wisdom in each one, I would have to say that my "favorite" was Chapter 14: As A Mom, I Was Supposed to Save My Child. Every grieving mother I know (including me), no matter how her child passed, feels guilt that she wasn't somehow able to protect and preserve her child's life. Reading this chapter was very helpful to me in releasing a lot of those guilty feelings. As (Coach D Anthony) states, "Becoming a mom doesn't make you a demigod or a superhero", and the intense and limitless love we feel for our children does not allow us to see, or change, the future. Releasing feelings of guilt allows me to be more in touch with the loving feelings and good memories I have of my son. Those are the feelings that truly honor him and define our relationship best.

 

You gotta read this book! It will change your thinking and change your life for the better. You have nothing to lose but a lot of ingrained beliefs and mistaken ideas that are keeping you from the future you deserve.

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14 Reasons - and you're grief will never be the same...

Book Excerpts

A Quick Peek At Some Of The Myths Debunked

 

Excerpt From The Chapter: If I'm Not Crying, That Means I'm Doing Well


The reality is, most often, an alarming amount of the pain and suffering we end up burdened with, and much of the duration of time we are tormented by such insufferable heartache and grief, is directly aligned with how we are choosing to perceive and respond to each potentially emotionally charged circumstance and event that we encounter along the way. The right choices and actions tend to cycle us up, lessening the psychological and emotional burden and turmoil to come, while the wrong choices and actions generate much the opposite. Just as in the case of the unnecessarily burdensome ensuing seven hours for the young monk above.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

As it turns out, actions like burying our emotions, denying our feelings, and not letting our tears out fall on the cycling-us-down and increasing-the-psychological-and-emotional-burden-and-turmoil side of the ledger. Why is that? Because, while it may feel easier and more settling at the moment, endeavoring to avoid the dreaded tears and sorrow and otherwise attempting to bury those feelings and emotions is akin to burying a bunch of ticking time bombs.

To ignore them today is only to further flirt with ever looming disaster. A disaster that, with the passing of time and happenstance, only continues to grow. And while you have no idea when each timer will run out, it’s a fair bet that eventually each of them will. And caught up in each blast will be you and whoever happens to be around you. Given this, it’s a much better option to go ahead and start minimizing that risk now. It’s a much better path to commence taking the appropriate steps to disarm those ticking dangers safely, starting today.

And even more, it’s not the healthiest thing in the world for you— unnecessarily holding onto all that incremental emotional turmoil, pressure, and stress. It is much the same as boiling a tightly lidded concoction at the highest temperature. With no way to escape, the pressure builds and builds within, until, inevitably, things explode. And there’s a mess to be cleaned in the kitchen. Of course, a considerably less consequential mishap and cleanup in my kitchen example versus the typically significantly messier psychological and emotional cleanup required once the ticking bombs commence to blow.

 

Given all of this, it’s clear to see that neither avoidance nor denial is the most productive or healthy step to be taken, correct? It’s clear to see that these only ultimately serve to drain us emotionally, mentally and physically, damage and diminish us, and make the pain and suffering even more oppressive and lasting than it ever needed to be.

From "14 Reasons You're Not Letting Yourself Heal", All Rights Reserved

Excerpt From The Chapter: Grief Is Permanent


And so, what’s paramount for me is helping you begin to dispense with the notion that you are doomed to have grief be a controlling part of your life—permanently. It’s critical to help you begin to see it’s entirely possible to move beyond the immense grief and heartache and to make it to the other side of all this debilitating misery and pain. A new side, where you will always miss your loved one, and occasionally still shed tears, but free of the acute pain and sorrow of grief, overwhelming and limiting every other aspect and every day of your life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

Consider this. What if the biggest obstacle standing in the way of you finally breaking free from all the crushing sorrow and agony you’ve been struggling with is you? What if much of what happens from here comes down to how you continue to perceive grief’s hold on you and how you continue to perceive your prospects for recovery, reclaiming yourself again, and once and for all taking back your life? And what if it’s ultimately your belief that grief is so invincible and permanent that has, to this point, most made it so?

How is it possible that our beliefs could be most responsible for making it so? It turns out that’s the way we humans happen to be wired. We virtually never accomplish that which we believe to be impossible. When our expectation, thoughts, feelings, perspective, and ingrained beliefs are firmly in opposition to something, it’s an incredibly powerful force to reckon with. However, the same happens also to be true when our leanings happen to be on the affirmative end of the spectrum.

 

This has proven out time and time again working with clients. Regardless of how long someone has been immersed in the immense pain, misery, and darkness, once we’re able to overcome the biggest difficulty of finally getting their minds and hearts open to the viability of future days no longer consumed by grief, the light commences to show itself, the long-indestructible proverbial chains cease to restrain, and the magic of healing is, in a big way, permitted to begin. This is the sheer power of changing to more advantageous perceptions.

 

And once again, to aid in that process, it is crucial we come to a more accurate perception of what grief actually is—and is not. Remember, grief, by definition, isn’t really a quiet, docile, low-impact kind of phenomenon, just the opposite. It’s acute, jarring, debilitating, draining, and disheartening—and exercises a fair amount of control over how we feel, what we can envision, and everything we do.

 

So, I would submit to you for consideration that, at the point things generally become quieter, less taxing, less controlling, and more sobering, the residual feelings that remain are no longer grief. In other words, things like the mere existence of tears and the act of really missing a loved one do not constitute grief. It constitutes really missing your loved one. Which again, in and of itself, does not constitute grief.

From "14 Reasons You're Not Letting Yourself Heal", All Rights Reserved

 

 

 

 

Excerpt From The Chapter: I Should Be Doing Better By Now


And, on a separate but somewhat related note, if you happen to be someone who is regularly found apologizing for how you feel, or for any natural reactions to overwhelming grief and sorrow, today’s a good day to begin letting go of that behavior.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

In other words, from this point forward … Stop apologizing! Chances are, there’s nothing wrong with the way you feel, and certainly nothing wrong with any tears you’re finding the need to shed. Why? Well, if you’re doing this, without realizing it, you are doing damage to yourself. Damage that only serves to make both your status and how you are feeling about it (and yourself) even worse.

 

You see, each time you apologize, you are sending yourself yet another internal message that you’ve done something wrong. Though that message is wrong, in your current state, neither your conscious nor subconscious realizes this. This, in turn, only results in you feeling even worse, further deepening the continuing state of hopelessness, misery, and pain. In the end, it is only moving you even farther away from recovery and making you that much more likely to soon apologize for where you happen to be again - starting the whole undeserved, emotionally devastating chain process all over again.

 

Newsflash … You are grieving! That means you are continuing to struggle with the abrupt and merciless taking of someone you truly love. Someone for whom you might have readily traded your own life. And just like that, everything you knew about everything immediately changed. Who, in their right mind, would expect you to automatically know just what to do? Who, in their right mind, would expect you to seamlessly adjust to such a devastating blow?

 

The reality is you happen to be struggling to overcome just about the most devastating and debilitating psychological and emotional wallop this life ever blindsides us with. (Perhaps more accurately, one of the most significant proverbial dumps this life is destined to take on us.) So, as you’re fighting to find your faculties and bearings, post such a crushing blow, generally speaking, no apology is necessary. What you’re struggling to overcome is far from run-in-the-mill, familiar or easy. Those around you that love you will simply need to come to appreciate this.

From "14 Reasons You're Not Letting Yourself Heal", All Rights Reserved

 

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Essential Healing Perspective 2

Essential Healing Perspective To Grow On

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